Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) is a nonreceptor tyrosine kinase (NRTK) with key roles in integrating growth and cell matrix adhesion signals, and FAK is a major driver of invasion and metastasis in cancer. Cell adhesion via integrin receptors is well known to trigger FAK signaling, and many of the players involved are known; however, mechanistically, FAK activation is not understood. Here, using a multidisciplinary approach, including biochemical, biophysical, structural, computational, and cell biology approaches, we provide a detailed view of a multistep activation mechanism of FAK initiated by phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate [PI(4,5)P 2 ]. Interestingly, the mechanism differs from canonical NRTK activation and is tailored to the dual catalytic and scaffolding function of FAK. We find PI(4,5)P 2 induces clustering of FAK on the lipid bilayer by binding a basic region in the regulatory 4.1, ezrin, radixin, moesin homology (FERM) domain. In these clusters, PI(4,5)P 2 induces a partially open FAK conformation where the autophosphorylation site is exposed, facilitating efficient autophosphorylation and subsequent Src recruitment. However, PI(4,5)P 2 does not release autoinhibitory interactions; rather, Src phosphorylation of the activation loop in FAK results in release of the FERM/kinase tether and full catalytic activation. We propose that PI(4,5)P 2 and its generation in focal adhesions by the enzyme phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate 5-kinase type Iγ are important in linking integrin signaling to FAK activation.cell signaling | phosphoinositides C ell attachment to the ECM is mediated via integrin transmembrane receptors on the cell surface. Integrin engagement to ECM components results in activation and clustering of integrins. In response to integrin activation, a large number of proteins are recruited to their cytoplasmic tails, resulting in the formation of focal adhesions (FAs) (1). On the one side, FAs are anchoring points for actomyosin stress fibers, which allow tension forces to build up when contracting fibers exert their pulling force via FAs against the ECM. On the other hand, integrin activation and the generation of tension trigger intricate signaling cascades. A central signaling component in FAs is the nonreceptor tyrosine kinase (NRTK) focal adhesion kinase (FAK).
Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) is sensitive to reversible oxidative inactivation by hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). Here we show that H2O2 reactivity of the active site thiolate (C152) is catalyzed by a previously unrecognized mechanism based on a dedicated proton relay promoting leaving group departure. Disruption of the peroxidatic reaction mechanism does not affect the glycolytic activity of GAPDH. Therefore, specific and separate mechanisms mediate the reactivity of the same thiolate nucleophile toward H2O2 and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, respectively. The generation of mutants in which the glycolytic and peroxidatic activities of GAPDH are comprehensively uncoupled allowed for a direct assessment of the physiological relevance of GAPDH H2O2 sensitivity. Using yeast strains in which wild-type GAPDH was replaced with H2O2-insensitive mutants retaining full glycolytic activity, we demonstrate that H2O2 sensitivity of GAPDH is a key component of the cellular adaptive response to increased H2O2 levels.
In this study, we introduce a fast and reliable rescoring scheme for docked complexes based on a semiempirical quantum mechanical PM6-DH2 method. The method utilizes a PM6-based Hamiltonian with corrections for dispersion energy and hydrogen bonds. The total score is constructed as the sum of the PM6-DH2 interaction enthalpy, the empirical force field (AMBER) interaction entropy, and the sum of the deformation (PM6-DH2, SMD) and the desolvation (SMD) energies of the ligand. The main advantage of the procedure is the fact that we do not add any empirical parameter for either an individual component of the total score or an individual protein-ligand complex. This rescoring method is applied to a very challenging system, namely, the HIV-1 protease with a set of ligands. As opposed to the conventional DOCK procedure, the PM6-DH2 rescoring based on all of the terms distinguishes between binders and nonbinders and provides a reliable correlation of the theoretical and experimental binding free energies. Such a dramatic improvement, resulting from the PM6-DH2 rescoring of all the complexes, provides a valuable yet inexpensive tool for rational drug discovery and de novo ligand design.
Cellular homoeostatic pathways such as macroautophagy (hereinafter autophagy) are regulated by basic mechanisms that are conserved throughout the eukaryotic kingdom. However, it remains poorly understood how these mechanisms further evolved in higher organisms. Here we describe a modification in the autophagy pathway in vertebrates, which promotes its activity in response to oxidative stress. We have identified two oxidation-sensitive cysteine residues in a prototypic autophagy receptor SQSTM1/p62, which allow activation of pro-survival autophagy in stress conditions. The Drosophila p62 homologue, Ref(2)P, lacks these oxidation-sensitive cysteine residues and their introduction into the protein increases protein turnover and stress resistance of flies, whereas perturbation of p62 oxidation in humans may result in age-related pathology. We propose that the redox-sensitivity of p62 may have evolved in vertebrates as a mechanism that allows activation of autophagy in response to oxidative stress to maintain cellular homoeostasis and increase cell survival.
Mechanosensing at focal adhesions regulates vital cellular processes. Here, we present results from molecular dynamics (MD) and mechano-biochemical network simulations that suggest a direct role of Focal Adhesion Kinase (FAK) as a mechano-sensor. Tensile forces, propagating from the membrane through the PIP2 binding site of the FERM domain and from the cytoskeleton-anchored FAT domain, activate FAK by unlocking its central phosphorylation site (Tyr576/577) from the autoinhibitory FERM domain. Varying loading rates, pulling directions, and membrane PIP2 concentrations corroborate the specific opening of the FERM-kinase domain interface, due to its remarkably lower mechanical stability compared to the individual alpha-helical domains and the PIP2-FERM link. Analyzing downstream signaling networks provides further evidence for an intrinsic mechano-signaling role of FAK in broadcasting force signals through Ras to the nucleus. This distinguishes FAK from hitherto identified focal adhesion mechano-responsive molecules, allowing a new interpretation of cell stretching experiments.
Von Willebrand factor (VWF) plays a central role in hemostasis. Triggered by shear-stress, it adheres to platelets at sites of vascular injury. Inactivation of VWF has been associated to the shielding of its adhesion sites and proteolytic cleavage. However, the molecular nature of this shielding and its coupling to cleavage under shear-forces in flowing blood remain unknown. In this study, we describe, to our knowledge, a new force-sensory mechanism for VWF-platelet binding, which addresses these questions, based on a combination of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, atomic force microscopy (AFM), and microfluidic experiments. Our MD simulations demonstrate that the VWF A2 domain targets a specific region at the VWF A1 domain, corresponding to the binding site of the platelet glycoprotein Ibα (GPIbα) receptor, thereby causing its blockage. This implies autoinhibition of the VWF for the binding of platelets mediated by the A1-A2 protein-protein interaction. During force-probe MD simulations, a stretching force dissociated the A1A2 complex, thereby unblocking the GPIbα binding site. Dissociation was found to be coupled to the unfolding of the A2 domain, with dissociation predominantly occurring before exposure of the cleavage site in A2, an observation that is supported by our AFM experiments. This suggests that the A2 domain prevents platelet binding in a force-dependent manner, ensuring that VWF initiates hemostasis before inactivation by proteolytic cleavage. Microfluidic experiments with an A2-deletion VWF mutant resulted in increased platelet binding, corroborating the key autoinhibitory role of the A2 domain within VWF multimers. Overall, autoinhibition of VWF mediated by force-dependent interdomain interactions offers the molecular basis for the shear-sensitive growth of VWF-platelet aggregates, and might be similarly involved in shear-induced VWF self-aggregation and other force-sensing functions in hemostasis.
A quantum mechanics (QM)-based scoring function has been applied to complexes of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) and thirty-one pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine-based inhibitors and their bioisosteres. A hybrid three-layer QM/MM setup (DFT-D/PM6-D3H4X/AMBER in generalized Born solvent) was used here for the first time as an extension of our previous full QM and SQM/MM (SQM means semiempirical QM) approaches. Two approaches to obtain the structures of the CDK2/inhibitor complexes were examined: i) building the modifications from one X-ray structure available coupled with a conformational search and ii) docking the compounds into CDK2. The QM-based scoring entailed a QM/SQM/MM optimization followed by calculations of the binding scores which were subsequently correlated with the experimental binding free energies. The correlation for the building protocol was good (r(2) = 0.64, predictive index = 0.81), whereas the docking approach failed. A decomposition of the interaction energies to ligand fragments enabled us to rationalize the differences in the binding affinities. In conclusion, we have developed and refined a QM-based scoring protocol and successfully applied it to reproduce the binding affinities in congeneric series of CDK2 inhibitors and to rationalize their potency. We thus propose that such a tool can be used in computer-aided rational drug design.
Despite their very close structural similarity, CxxC/S-type (class I) glutaredoxins (Grxs) act as oxidoreductases, while CGFS-type (class II) Grxs act as FeS cluster transferases. Here we show that the key determinant of Grx function is a distinct loop structure adjacent to the active site. Engineering of a CxxC/S-type Grx with a CGFS-type loop switched its function from oxidoreductase to FeS transferase. Engineering of a CGFS-type Grx with a CxxC/S-type loop abolished FeS transferase activity and activated the oxidative half reaction of the oxidoreductase. The reductive half-reaction, requiring the interaction with a second GSH molecule, was enabled by switching additional residues in the active site. We explain how subtle structural differences, mostly depending on the structure of one particular loop, act in concert to determine Grx function.
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